Corcitura by Melika Dannese Lux
Corcitura. Some call it hybrid, others half-blood, mongrel, beast. They are all names for the same thing: vampire—the created progeny of the half-wolf, half-vampire, barb-tongued Grecian Vrykolakas, and the suave but equally vicious Russian Upyr. Corcitura: this is what happens when a man is attacked by two vampires of differing species. He becomes an entirely new breed—ruthless, deadly, unstoppable…almost.
Check out an excerpt here.
GUEST POST:
Corcitura Backstory Article
Be honest. You’re wondering what on earth a
Corcitura is, right? Well, I’d be more than happy to slake your curiosity! ;) Corcitura is the Romanian word for
hybrid. It has no vampiric connotations whatsoever, but before I tell you why I
chose this as the name for my new creature, how about a little backstory?
A
year before I even got the idea for the Corcitura, I had seen a painting that
sent my mind reeling with all the possible implications behind it. The painting
was “Oh, what’s that in the hollow?”
by Edward Robert Hughes.
I
took one look at that painting and screamed “VAMPIRE!” There’s something so
morbidly entrancing and enigmatic about that painting. Is he dead? The sheen of
his nearly translucent eyes certainly seems to suggest it. But what if he’s
just resting until the moon rises? I only recently found out that he is
dead! But back then, I was still in the dark, and so I did what all good storytellers
do: I totally ignored the inconvenient facts behind the painting and ran
roughshod with my inspiration. Those translucent eyes were never far from my
mind and inspired me so much that they found life in the book’s eponymous
creature.
So,
why vampires, after all? Out of all the monsters of myth, vampires had always
been my favorites. I had always been fascinated by how they could be suave and
alluring on the outside (or when the sun wasn’t up), but with the flick of a
barbed tongue, turn into slavering, fang-toothed, bloodsucking beasts! The
juxtaposition fascinated me, since in original folklore almost all vampires are
essentially plagues. Some just know how to mask their true nature better than
others.
I
knew if I was going to write about vampires, they’d better be different and
intriguing, and since I have always been crazy for folklore from different
parts of the world, this idea gave me an excuse to explore vampire mythology.
It’s fascinating reading, freaky, but
fascinating. Up until this point, I had
the makings of a novel, but my vampire wasn’t being cooperative at all and just
stayed hidden in the background, kicking through my mind until he finally got his act together and
distinguished himself enough to set the story in motion. Until then, I had
nicknamed him “Our Combo,” since he was going to be a hybrid—created after
being bitten by two vampires of differing species. I knew I couldn’t continue
calling him by such a McDonald’s Value Meal sounding name forever, so I took
the next step in finding out what the word “hybrid” in Romanian was (since
Stefan’s family has a long and torturous history deep in the soil of that
country). I have Romanian ancestors, so digging into the country’s myths and
legends was an added bonus. When I discovered that corcitura meant hybrid, I
thought about it, and since I didn’t like any of the names I’d made up in the
interim, it eventually stuck.
One huge thing that was clear in my mind from
the outset was to make certain my novel took place before Dracula was even published. Dracula
was such a tremendous milestone in vampire literature…and I didn’t want my
characters to know about it at all. I wanted to create new myths, new ways of
dispatching the creatures of the night, new fears and horrors—all things which
would have been greatly hindered by a post-1897 setting. Where would the
suspense be if my characters could fall back on what they’d read in Stoker’s
novel? When they came up against pointy-toothed demons, I wanted no little
lights going off in my characters’ heads, and definitely no saying, “Ah ha! This is exactly like what happened in Dracula!
Quick, get some garlic!” I wanted my characters to have absolutely no frame of reference for dealing with
the horrible situations they found themselves in, which is why all the action
in the novel takes place from 1888 (there is also a very ripping reason for choosing that year, but you’ll have to read the
book to find out why ;) through 1895.
That settled, I turned my attention
to sunlight. Yes, sunlight. That was the real impetus behind the idea of having
the victim be a hybrid, and was how the whole “combo” concept was born—finding a way to make sure my vampire
would be able to frolic around during daylight hours without being charred to
ashes by the sun’s rays. For three months, I went back and forth on how a
vampire could achieve this, during which time I whittled down my choices for
favorite vampire candidates. Once I started seeing how different the strengths
and weaknesses were, and understanding how much more indestructible the
combined blood of two vampires would be (plus the human blood of the original
victim), I knew I was on the right path, and settled on the Vrykolakas (from
Greece) and the Upyr (from Russia) for the creators of my new vampiric species.
The
Vrykolakas (referred to as the Vryk from this point forward) was a jackpot find
for me, mainly because he’s a virtual unknown in literature, but mostly because
it is unclear if the Vryk is a vampire or a werewolf. You see where this is
going, right? Just before I hit the halfway point of the novel, I realized I
would have to be crazy not to exploit that gray area to the hilt. It only made
sense to embrace this ambiguity, which led to a whole new story arc being
created for my two female Vryk protagonists later on in the novel. I am so
happy I did this because it launched the second and third halves of the novel
onto a completely different plane, with the book beginning to essentially write
itself from that point on. To quote Colonel Hannibal Smith, “I love it when a
plan comes together!” ;)
The
Upyr and the Vryk are two sides of the same coin. Where the Vryk was
plague-ravaged, nasty, and didn’t do anything to hide his true nature, the Upyr
moved heaven and earth not to show his hand. My Vryk was rabid and couldn’t do
much to control it. But the Upyr…he was a bird of an entirely different breed. Debonair
on the outside, but blacker than the foulest dungeon, he was ten times more
deadly than the Vryk and no one would ever be able to tell. He was my linchpin
and turned out to come on scene much quicker than expected, which goes to show
you that when the character wants out, you’d better listen, because from the
moment he waltzed into the story, everything was transformed.
I
began this process thinking I would just write a vampire novel with a new
twist, but what started as a story about hybrid vampires quickly morphed into
something beyond what I had been planning to write. Probably more than anything else, Corcitura became the story of the
corruption of a soul and how this has a domino effect on all those who
encounter him—life is overturned for everyone; everything they have ever known
is distorted past recognition; nothing can ever go back to the way it used to
be, for now they live in danger, fear, and some that loved him most meet their
ends at his hands.
After
everything was said and done, and the book marinated and went through countless
edits, I realized that Corcitura is,
in fact, a horror novel, but not in the normal sense. It’s horror on many
levels. The first part deals with the visceral, blatant horror of the vampires
and the terror of having no way of stopping these creatures from corrupting
you, body and soul; the second with the horror of deception, lying, treachery,
betrayal, with thinking you know someone but discovering they have lied to you
about practically everything; the third with the horror of abandonment; and
lastly with the horror of the unknown—the uncertainty of things to come. But Corcitura is also a historical novel, a
thriller, a book with that unnerving Gothic feeling that permeated the stories
I grew up with—novels you could lose yourself in for days at a time, tales
filled with characters you’d miss when the final page was turned. That’s what I
set out to write, even more than a straight up vampire novel, because it’s
really not about vampires in the end. It’s about
the people whose lives they destroy, the people who choose to fight against
them, who team up with vampires who have decided that it doesn’t matter what
the legends have taught them, they will do everything in their power to stop
the undead from claiming even more souls.
Nine
years, thousands of revisions, and 700 pages later, Corcitura is finally here. Welcome to a world where an ancient Upyr
plots your destruction and a half-wolf, half-vampire haunts your doorstep, its
barbed tongue poised to rip into your throat the second you answer its call.
Button
up your collar.
Keep
the flame burning.
And
come along for the ride.
About the author:
I have been an author since the age
of fourteen and write Young/New Adult historical romance, suspense,
supernatural/paranormal thrillers, fantasy, sci-fi, short stories, novellas—you
name it, I write it! I am also a classically trained soprano/violinist/pianist
and have been performing since the age of three. Additionally, I hold a BA in
Management and an MBA in Marketing.
If I had not decided to become a
writer, I would have become a marine biologist, but after countless years spent
watching Shark Week, I realized I am very attached to my arms and legs
and would rather write sharks into my stories than get up close and personal
with those toothy wonders.
That painting definitely screams vampire! It is so pretty and spooky all at the same time.
ReplyDelete